Back in the bygone decade, hiring remote freelancers for tech projects was a risky undertaking, and even more so if you hired them from shady sites. The good thing is that there are now dozens of good, reputable, easy-to-use platforms with secure payment processing and decent project management systems to help you connect with pre-vetted professional electrical engineers and designers.
Some freelancing sites focus heavily on tech and engineering projects, such as Cad Crowd, a platform specializing in the AEC (Architecture, Engineering, and Construction) and MEP (Mechanical, Electrical, and Plumbing) industries. As the name implies, it places heavy emphasis on the use of CAD (computer-aided design) to bring ideas of electronic products, both consumer-grade and industrial equipment, from sketches to reality and even to the mass-manufacturing stage. In general, for the vast majority of electrical engineering and design projects out there, Cad Crowd most likely has you covered.
But because it’s always a good idea to shop around and compare your options, the following list can be a good starting point to take a glance at what’s available and how each platform can cater to your needs.
Specialized platforms
A major benefit of specialized platforms is the predefined focus on a given industry or business sector. In the case of electrical engineering and design, some of the first names that usually come up in the search are as follows.

Cad Crowd
More than 100,000 CAD designers find a home at Cad Crowd, where they offer a comprehensive range of engineering and design services for just about every product category in existence, including electronic devices design services. Common projects include PCB layout and schematics, embedded firmware, enclosure design by 3D modeling, product visualization, animated renderings, test and simulation, and DFM analysis. Thanks to the platform’s focus on specific niches, you have an easier time choosing a freelancer or two from a higher concentration of relevant, qualified, pre-vetted professionals to handle even the most specific and highly personalized electronics design projects.
As a specialized platform, Cad Crowd facilitates a number of services you rarely see in its more generalized counterparts, such as innovation licensing, patent filing, design for assembly, reverse engineering, FEA (finite element analysis), and more. Cad Crowd also provides effective project management tools along with technical support to help improve communication and collaboration between clients and engineers.

EngineerX
Similar to a lot of freelancing platforms all across the web, EngineerX is at its core an agency to help you match your electrical design project with a qualified engineer from its database. Of course, the single biggest differentiating factor between EngineerX and about 99% of all the other platforms is that it focuses solely on engineering projects, including electrical, robotics, automation, test engineering, mechanical design, quality assurance and control, Value Analysis and Value Engineering (VAVE), and process engineering. EngineerX prioritizes long-term collaboration, as in hiring an engineer permanently, but it also caters to hiring for short-term projects.
Website: EngineerX.com

Field Engineer
Another freelance agency, Field Engineer, maintains a network of at least 75,000 vetted engineers spread across 200 countries worldwide. The platform focuses on telecom/hardware deployment, connecting clients with engineers specializing in RF design, computer hardware, satellite communications, system integration, and more. The platform says that every registered freelancer has been checked and verified for their qualifications as well as liability insurance. You can’t directly browse for freelancers on the site; instead, you must first post a job and wait for qualified engineers to apply for it. After reviewing the candidates, you assign one of them to the project and manage the work via a dashboard. Engineers typically charge an hourly rate.
Website: FieldEngineer.com

Trees Engineering
A service marketplace built to bridge the gap between engineers, subcontractors, and clients, Trees Engineering also functions as an agency that works primarily to match your project with qualified freelancers. The platform offers two hiring options: either hiring freelancers to handle specific engineering tasks or subcontracting engineering services to an external provider. It focuses on industrial EPC (Engineering, Procurement, and Construction) projects and includes a lot of disciplines on the service page. One of those disciplines is electrical, for which the platform lists nearly 1800 freelance engineer profiles. Each profile is attached with comprehensive information about certifications, employment history, daily rate, experience levels, education, etc.
Website: Trees-Engineering.com

Sumer Innovations
A niche freelancing platform serving the MEP industry, Sumer Innovations is a welcome addition to the already vast online talent marketplace landscape. It does offer freelance engineering assistance, engineering outsourcing, and CAD drafting support for clients, but the scope of services is, of course, limited to the architectural and construction industries. Therefore, hiring electrical engineers and drafting professionals from the platform makes sense if your electrical product is part of the required system in a building. These might include products like lighting, water sprinkler automation, HVAC components, and basically any device to be installed in a smart home. Sumer Innovations is based out of Colorado and is currently licensed to provide professional engineering services in all 50 states in the US.
Website: SumerInnovations.com

X-PRO CAD
If your next project has anything to do with electrical/electronic product development and all the processes it entails, X-PRO CAD has the right freelancers to get the job done. The platform’s scope of specializations includes electrical engineering, consumer products design, reverse engineering, and CAD services, among others. As for the workflow, it’s as simple as it can get: you describe the project, get matched with a pre-qualified freelancer picked by the platform, deposit the payment, and receive the deliverables.
Website: X-Procad.com

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All About Circuits
It’s apparently one of the world’s largest independent online communities for electrical engineers. All About Circuits came about in 2004 with nothing but an open-source textbook and a forum, but now it has grown into a busy platform for electrical and electronic engineers to share expertise and experience. It’s neither a freelancing platform nor a job board, but the forum portion, especially the “job and career advising” section, welcomes posts about open projects, paid jobs, and general guidance on employment-related matters. Whether you’re looking for PCB-design specialists or electrical/electronic product design professionals, All About Circuits is a nice place to be.
Website: AllAboutCircuits.com

Ennomotive
In simple words, Ennomotive is a crowdsourcing platform where you can post a project (or challenge) and ask the community to propose ideas and solutions to solve issues. Ennomotive hosts a global network of more than 25,000 professionals and startups specializing in sustainability, mechanical engineering services, and IoT innovations. You can post the project as an “open challenge” and offer a reward for any member who can solve technical issues or suggest a viable workaround. The reward can be a sum of money or a collaboration agreement.
Website: Ennomotive.com

Make:Projects
A joint venture between Make: Community and ProjectBoard, the Make:Projects operates more or less the same way as Ennomotive for the most part. It’s a platform to share your creative ideas, potential innovations, and work-in-progress projects to solicit constructive feedback from the members. You can utilize the community group chat or direct messaging feature to communicate with other members and open the doors to potential collaboration through direct hiring. While the whole site and the project catalog appear DIY-ish, it’s a reliable, cost-effective method to find the talent you need without going through formal hiring processes.
Website: MakeProjects.com

Hackaday
In a fashion similar to Ennomotive and Make:Projects mentioned earlier, Hackaday is an online community to share engineering projects of any sort and invite others to contribute to solving technical problems. One thing to remember is that Hackaday is very clear about the fact that the platform is a repository of “open hardware” projects, so everyone can basically use the same ideas and replicate them for any purpose without any restriction. In the project’s catalog, you’ll see exciting builds like a clamshell palmtop, a hexagon LED table, an arcade cabinet made from e-waste, a washing machine remote control, etc. While it’s not a freelancing platform, the open nature of the community can lead to potential collaboration with other members.
Website: Hackaday.io

Tasker
A global on-demand talent marketplace, Tasker likes to boast about having more than 1,000 engineering skills in its list of engineering services. The areas of focus include PCB design, process automation (robotics), engineering simulation and analysis, mechanical CAD drawings, engineering feasibility study, engineering project management, and technical documentation, to name a few. Tasker is a platform built by engineers and for engineers to embark on flexible employment opportunities. Every company that needs to inject engineering expertise into a project from an independent freelancer should take Tasker into consideration.
Website: TaskerPlatform.com

Engineers Australia
As you’ve probably guessed, Engineers Australia is an online community of professional engineers based in Australia. If you’re willing to hire young engineers, either in their full professional capacity or to fill graduate programs and internships, the community is more than happy to post your project on its job boards. Engineers Australia is home to more than 40,000 engineering students and graduates eager to experience early career roles in engineering design companies. You can post a project to the job board through Prosple, its technology partner.
Website: EngineersAustralia.org.au

Built In
A recruiting platform for tech talents, Built In (For Employers) gives you access to a hub of 5 million members visiting the site on a monthly basis. More than half of them are qualified as mid-senior professionals with an average experience of 8.5 years. Of those five million people, 19% are categorized under Operations/IT (may include electrical/electronic engineers), and 15% have product design expertise (CAD drafting should belong to this group). A single job posting on Built In costs $99 per month.
Website: BuiltIn.com

Dice
Just about every feature you can find in any general job board is available in Dice. The only difference is that the platform specializes in giving you access to nothing but tech talents, including electrical/electronic engineers and CAD professionals. Dice maintains a network of more than 7.2 million talents, with around 70,000 new members per month. It also claims that you won’t find about 25% of the registered professionals on any other freelancing site. Dice isn’t a free platform. Posting a job costs $399, for which your project will stay on the listing for 30 days.
Website: Dice.com
Job Boards
Most job boards are not specific about the industries they serve. They’re like general freelancing platforms, but with minimum (if any) involvement in the hiring process and project management; some job boards don’t even take part in freelancers’ vetting at all.

Handshake
Technically, Handshake is a specialized platform because it targets the clients’ job posts at active college students and recent graduates instead of experienced engineering freelancers. Handshake has a network of at least 18 million members from about 90% of top-ranked institutions in the United States. The platform also maintains official partnerships with more than 1,500 colleges and universities. Basic access on Handshake will get you a free first job posting and 100 matching candidates. Clients can connect directly to any of the schools in the network by request or posting a job to the institutions’ directories.
Website: joinhandshake.com

AllRemote
Most freelancers in AllRemote specialize in software and app development services, but the platform says the pool of talent itself consists of more than 50,000 vetted freelancers in addition to the 600,000 professionals already listed in its network. The professionals come from various backgrounds, including engineering and product design. AllRemote is neither a job board nor a traditional freelancing platform; you can’t post a project on the platform, and there’s no direct messaging feature to communicate with the registered freelancers. It’s a recruitment agency built to cater to your needs for remote workers. Instead of browsing portfolios and ratings, you must contact AllRemote regarding the project as well as the hiring requirement, and the platform handles all the searching and matching on your behalf. You only pay when you decide to hire the freelancer AllRemote recommends.
Website: AllRemote.Jobs

Hubstaff Talent
Here’s the best thing about Hubstaff Talent: you can use all the features, both the search and filtering functions, free of charge. And the second-best thing is that it gives access not only to individual freelancers registered with the platform, but also to agencies of various specializations. Posting a job costs nothing, and freelancers or agencies can send the applications (not a bid) to your contact information. The search function is pretty comprehensive, too. You can filter based on skill sets such as electrical/electronic design, PCB design, engineering, CAD, etc. It also has sorting options like average pay rate, availability, languages, and years of experience.
Website: HubstaffTalent.net

FreeUp
If Toptal only accepts fewer than 3% of all the freelancers applying to the platform, FreeUp makes an even bigger (or smaller) claim of giving you access only to the top 1% of the available online talent. The platform actively searches for new talent through interviews and rigorous vetting processes every week to maintain the high standard. You can’t browse freelancers and contact them directly on the platform. To get connected with candidates, you must send a request to FreeUp and describe your project requirements to get a recommendation of qualified professionals. FreeUp promises to find a match for the project within one business day. The list of available skill sets on the website includes electrical engineers, CAD designers, PCB designers, industrial design experts, and product designers.
Website: FreeUp.net

Remote OK
The nicest thing about Remote OK is that the platform is very simple to use, which isn’t really saying much because it’s a plain and simple job board. Once you post a project on the site, the information is cross-posted to 220 other sites in the network. But it’s not free; in fact, the fee is on the expensive side of the spectrum, with a single post costing around $490, for which the post will remain on the distribution for 30 days. Remote OK says that every post is also forwarded to nearly 2 million job seekers in its database and the Google for Jobs recruitment network.
Website: RemoteOK.com

Kolabtree
A notable distinguishing factor of Kolabtree is that it focuses on connecting clients with PhD-qualified expert freelancers. In other words, just about every freelancer on the site is an experienced professional in their respective field of expertise. Most of them charge a premium hourly rate, but you can still find some relatively affordable services ranging from $15 to $50 per hour. Posting a project is a pretty straightforward process, and you get to choose whether it will be available to all freelancers or an “invitation-only” project. You can also browse the freelancers’ profiles using the filtering options to find experts in relevant disciplines such as electronic circuits, electrical engineering, electronics engineering, and CAD & 3D modeling.
Website: Kolabtree.com

LinkedIn Jobs
Smartly positioning itself as a social networking site for professionals, LinkedIn has now become a valuable resource for employers to connect with freelancers in just about any job category. You can treat it like a direct sourcing site to engage and communicate with professionals within your network, and invite them to take part in your electrical design project as freelance hires. That said, LinkedIn also has its own job board to give your project an even greater exposure. Free and paid job posts are available; the latter promises to bring you three times the number of applicants compared to the former.
Website: Business.LinkedIn.com

FlexJobs
Having been around since 2007, FlexJobs claims to have helped thousands of companies of all sizes from many different industries throughout the United States and beyond with remote hiring. The keyword here is “remote” because FlexJobs specializes in connecting you with work-from-home professionals, whether as a full-time employee, a part-time worker, or a freelancer. It’s a premium job board; employer membership (subscription) fee starts at $199 per month, for which you get unlimited job posts and unrestricted access to FlexJobs’s database of job seekers from all around the world, including engineering and industrial design services. FlexJobs provides an ATS tool for every subscribed client.
Website: FlexJobs.com

SimplyHired/Indeed
The main site of SimplyHired is intended for job seekers. When you click on the “Post Jobs” feature, you’ll be notified that your projects will be published on Indeed instead. Ease of use has been the highlight point of both platforms. You can post a project in a matter of minutes and manage the applicants in the Candidate Management Tool, a built-in feature in the Employer Dashboard. While the “standard” job posting is free, you can upgrade it to either “Standard Sponsored” or “Premium Sponsored” with a flexible maximum budget threshold to gain greater exposure and additional management tools. Indeed doesn’t specialize in electrical engineering and design, but with nearly 60 million job seekers visiting the site, chances are you’ll attract more than a handful of applicants with every job post.
Website: SimplyHired.com / Indeed.com

Remotive
There are some similarities between FlexJobs and Remotive. Both are premium job boards, and they focus on helping you connect with professionals interested in work-from-home jobs. But there are differences, too. Remotive isn’t a generalized job board as it specializes in targeting IT talents such as DevOps, software developers, data specialists, and engineers. While it doesn’t explicitly mention the specific engineering fields, the platform’s specialization in technology should ideally include talents with electrical and electronic engineering backgrounds. Every job post is distributed across Remotive’s social channels, such as LinkedIn, Google Jobs, and Slack Community. Basic membership fee starts at $299 per month.
Website: Remotive.com

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Pangian
Despite its rather bland website, Pangian is a pretty busy page with one-and-a-half million visitors over the last 12 months. Pangian is another general job board catering to clients in need of remote professionals. The platform mentions having a network of more than 400,000 professionals from various backgrounds, from marketing experts and graphic designers to project managers and electrical engineering services. Over the course of its history, Pangian has shared nearly 17,000 projects through the platform. Pangian is not the most informative job board website out there, but it’s an alternative you might want to try.
Website: Pangian.com

Working Nomads
A general job board for remote employment, Working Nomads allows job seekers to send applications directly to the client’s email or via the website. The platform has been around for more than a decade, and currently posts more than 30,000 jobs per month. But like many other general job boards out there, it doesn’t offer any kind of candidate vetting process. It simply curates job listings and spreads the word about clients’ projects across the web. A single job post costs $199, for which the project is shared on the platform’s LinkedIn profile (with more than 350,000 followers). It offers discounts for bundle job postings.
Website: WorkingNomads.com

Crowdspring
The aptly-named “crowdspring” prioritizes crowdsourced projects. Founded in 2008, the platform now maintains a massive network of more than 220,000 creatives from over 195 countries. In addition to the crowdsourced model, it also caters to 1-to-1 projects; this is where you can post a custom job description and hire freelancers. Crowdspring has no category for electrical engineering, design, and PCB layout schematics, but it does highlight wireless tech products as emerging consumer goods, suggesting that they’re within the platform’s scope of expertise.
Website: Crowdspring.com

Workhoppers
Posted projects on Workhoppers are targeted not only at professional freelancers, but also at university students and semi-retired talents looking for remote jobs. You can search for talents by skill, city, or country, and filter the results based on levels of experience, education, and work site (remote or on-site). Workshoppers has a freelancer for every job, from furniture assemblers and translators to engineers and CAD specialists. However, there are neither pre-vetting processes nor assistance with setting the budgets for projects, so please practice due diligence because you have to negotiate the terms of the hiring directly with the candidates. Workhoppers is a premium platform; a basic membership account for a client starts at $39 per month. Registration is currently handled at freelance.ca and freelance. job websites.
Website: Workhoppers.com

Flexing It
There are three jobseeker categories in Flexing It: professionals, freelancers, and experts, although the platform doesn’t really say how they’re different. It also claims that the talent pool consists of professionals with work experience of anything between 5 and 20 years across every major discipline, which should include product design services and electrical/electronic engineering. Furthermore, about 50% of the workforce registered on the platform have such educational backgrounds as Tier 1 MBA, engineering, law, and arts from institutions like Stanford and Harvard. For every candidate that applies to your project, you can request a professional verification process that can take from 10 to 12 business days to complete.
Website: FlexingIt.com

Freelancermap
Prioritized fields of expertise in Freelancermap include IT architecture, software development and design, SAP, consulting and management, as well as graphics and media. The easiest way to use the platform is to browse the public directory of freelancers. Utilize the filtering options to sort the results based on skills, locations, hourly rates, and other criteria. You’re also allowed to contact the freelancers individually. Freelancermap takes no commission from the freelancers’ pay, but it’s a premium platform nonetheless. Membership plan for employers starts at €89 (a little more than $100) per month.
Website: Freelancermap.com

Insight Global
An international staffing agency, Insight Global, can provide you with access to talent from more than 50 countries worldwide. The agency itself maintains more than 70 office locations throughout the United States, Canada, and the United Kingdom. It works by connecting you with tech professionals, including those specializing in engineering design and visualization (3D models and AutoCAD drawings). More importantly, Insight Global caters to project-based hiring needs, meaning you get the option to specify the project requirements and the desired freelancer’s qualifications, and have the agency recommend an exact match.
Website: InsightGlobal.com

LHH
While the primary staffing service is for permanent hiring, LHH also provides temporary employment solutions. This is a good option when you need to scale up the team, but aren’t ready yet to commit to another full-time hire. LHH claims to have a network of more than 500,000 professionals in addition to the 12,000 global colleagues ready to reinforce your team with a boost of expertise. Just like with Insight Global, the most practical way to use LHH is to utilize the search function. Enter the right keyword or a professional relevant to your project (electrical engineer, product design, and CAD), and then select the candidate to request further information from the platform.
Website: LHH.com

High5Hire
The process of matching a project and a candidate in High5Hire is entirely based on your project’s Statement of Work (SOW). In other words, the scope of work must be clearly defined for the platform to be able to find a suitable freelancer to handle the workload. SOW is almost like project requirements, but with additional details like budget allocation, conditions for termination, payment schedule, etc. For example, if the project calls for the expertise of an experienced electrical/electronic engineer and a CAD draftsperson, the platform can either find two freelancers to cover the tasks or a single person who does both, depending on the budget.
Website: High5Hire.com

TechFetch
Based in Virginia, USA, TechFetch is a job portal built for IT companies and clients everywhere to find the best-qualified candidates for open tech positions, including engineers, CAD operators, product designers, and more. The platform has been around for 15 years (formerly as Corp-Corp.com), and currently boasts about having more than 2 million resumes accessible by members. It’s not cheap, however; a basic subscription costs $1,799 annually, for which you’re granted access to 10,000 resumes and 500 job posts.
Website: TechFetch.com

Contra
You can browse individual professionals and contractors for free on Contra. The search function has filtering options based on the platform’s profile badges (Top Independent, Expert, and Quick Responders), fields of expertise, tools (software and equipment they use), industries, location, languages, and pay rates. Contra also offers a premium “project creation” feature, but it comes with a $29 contract fee for a one-time project or $29 per month per contractor for a long-term project. You can also post a job using the provided AI tools, guaranteed to attract applicants within just a few hours.
Website: Contra.com

Outsource Accelerator
Instead of giving you access to a database of remote freelancers you can hire to work on your projects, Outsource Accelerator provides a directory of a long list of outsourcing companies from all around the world, more than 2,300 of them. But you don’t have to contact them individually anyway because the platform functions as a conduit to bridge the communication between you and the outsourcing suppliers. The website offers an intuitive feature where you can compare the typical overhead associated with hiring an onshore freelancer (from countries like the US, the UK, and Australia) with the offshore alternative.
Website: OutsourceAccelerator.com

Malt
A freelance platform headquartered in Paris, France, Malt also maintains a presence in other European countries like Germany, Spain, the Netherlands, Belgium, and Switzerland. You can find it in the Nordics, the United Kingdom, and the United Arab Emirates as well. According to the information provided in the UK version, Malt has a network of more than 850,000 freelancers and contractors, along with over 70,000 registered companies in Europe. You can simply search for CAD design services with relevant skills for your project and contact them directly.
Website: Malt.com

SkipTheDrive
Another free job board, Skip the Drive, is geared toward freelancers looking for remote employment opportunities. As for the clients, the platform offers “targeted” job postings where it forwards your projects to the most commonly visited sites by freelancers, so you have a higher chance of getting increased exposure from all the right places. It does mention something to the effect of having a 30-day guarantee of satisfaction for premium job postings with a full refund option, but pricing information is unclear.
Website: SkipTheDrive.com
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The Ladders
You hear a lot of promising claims from The Ladders. For example, of all the 100,000 professionals registered with the site, about 89% have a bachelor’s degree, and 39% have a master’s degree in various fields of study. Every single one of them is based in either the United States or Canada, and all the freelancers have an average of 15 years of experience. You can post one job each month free of charge, or purchase the promoted job plan for $599 per post. There’s a big gap between the zero-cost and the premium option, but The Ladders says that the latter model comes with an average of 111 more candidate views and 9 times more applicants than the former.
Website: TheLadders.com

PostJobFree
The aptly named job board allows both freelancers and clients to use the platform at zero cost. PostJobFree is based in Florida and focuses on connecting employers and professionals across the United States. Every job post is active for 30 days. The site will send an email reminder approaching the period, after which you can simply refresh the listing to keep the posting up for another month. It also has a simple search function, and you can contact the candidates for potential collaboration through the site.
Website: PostJobFree.com

Monster
When you post a job on Monster, the listing will be displayed not only on the platform itself but also on CareerBuilder as well as its extensive network of partner sites and job boards. A standard account comes with the “Promoted Jobs” feature, which costs $18 per day, charged on a pay-as-you-go basis. Monster Pro account gives you instant access to millions of candidates in the network for many skills, including consumer product design services.
Website: Hiring.Monster.com

Jobvertise
Creating an employer account is free with Jobvertise. The free account gives you access to 3 resume views per day. To actually be able to post promoted jobs, you need to register with one of the premium accounts. The lowest subscription tier is the Starter pack, costing $34.99 per month, for which you get 500 resume views per day and 2 promoted job postings. Jobvertise shines in its simplicity; the resume search function is easy to use, and you get robust filtering options such as countries (USA, Canada, or International), profession category, keywords, and that’s about it.
Website: Jobvertise.com

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General freelancing platforms
Among the biggest appeals of a general freelancing platform is the extensive list of skills it has in its portfolio. Some sites have hundreds of thousands to millions of registered freelancers from all over the world, offering a broad category of services at affordable rates. Of course, not every single freelancer on these platforms is an electrical engineer or a CAD draftsperson, but there’s a good chance you’ll find a good number of professionals from relevant educational backgrounds and levels of experience for your project in the listings.

Freelancer
The aptly named “Freelancer” is another popular talent marketplace where you can discover professionals specializing in electrical engineering, design, and drafting services. It’s a general freelancing platform, meaning there’s no prioritization of any particular field of expertise over the others. Browsing freelancers by skill reveals an overwhelmingly large list of disciplines; among those are electronics, electrical engineering, electronic design, embedded systems, engineering drawing, analog electronics, and more. The sheer scale of Freelancer offers wide-open access to a global workforce, but at the same time, it puts the responsibility of vetting and quality assurance on the clients themselves. This isn’t a terrible idea, so long as you practice due diligence.
Website: Freelancer.com

Toptal
One of the biggest selling points of Toptal is the exceptionally rigorous vetting process. It claims to accept fewer than 3% of all the professionals registering for the platform every month. Obviously, not every single one of those talents is an electrical engineer or a drafter. Toptal positions itself as a premium freelancing platform, so clients have to pay a substantial amount to use its services as well. Strangely enough, Toptal doesn’t explicitly list electrical and electronic engineers in the list of skill sets it covers. But the platform does have product and prototype design experts as well as design consultants. It doesn’t really matter because you can’t directly choose a specific freelancer. Instead, you need to post a project and let the platform do the searching and matching tasks on your behalf. Toptal allows you to hire a team of professionals in case your project is best handled by a multidisciplinary group of freelancers.
Website: Toptal.com

PeoplePerHour
Freelancers on PeoplePerHour can get to the project you post by submitting bids or proposals. You’ll find the same practice in many other platforms, too. This means the freelancers have the freedom to set their own rates for any specific project. That said, clients are allowed to hire freelancers directly via the “Search Offers” feature. Enter your project keywords (electrical engineering, PCB layout, schematics, electronic design, etc.) in the search bar without picking any category, and you’ll be provided with a list of freelancers’ profiles offering services relevant to the project. If you, however, use the “post project” function, PeoplePerHour provides you with a dashboard that works pretty much like a central hub to manage projects, communication, deliverables, proposals, and feedback, all in one place.
Website: PeoplePerHour.com

Guru
A quick glance at Guru’s homepage, you’ll see some big claims about the platform having been used by 800,000 employers worldwide, with a 99% satisfaction rate and amounting to $250 million collective payout to freelancers. Guru makes for an affordable platform for clients as it offers free, unlimited quote requests from freelancers and job posts. However, there’s a 2.9% handling fee for every invoice generated from a project. Under the “Engineering” category, Guru includes a wide range of available skills such as circuit design, finite element analysis, industrial design, electrical engineering, product development, Arduino, and more. In the “CAD and Technical Drawings” section, you’ll come across freelancers offering services in drafting, schematic design, prototyping, etc.
Website: Guru.com

Workana
What separates Workana from many other general freelancing platforms is how it focuses on connecting clients with freelancers based in Latin American countries. The idea behind Workana is to provide clients situated in the United States and Canada (or basically anywhere else in North America and Central America, for that matter) easy access to more affordable talent who work in the same time zone. Workana doesn’t mention anything about electrical design or drafting in the service page, but it has an “Engineering & Manufacturing” category filled with such sections as Industrial Design, CAD Drawing, and 3D Modeling. The range of talents isn’t as extensive as what you can see in Upwork or Guru, but it can be a good alternative, nevertheless, for 3D modeling design services.
Website: Workana.com

Truelancer
For a platform that claims to provide access to more than 2 million freelancers in 120 countries with over 3500 skills, it really isn’t a good sign when major categories such as engineering and electronic design aren’t even highlighted on the service page. Fortunately, it doesn’t really matter because you don’t have to search for individual freelancers with those specific skill sets to find them anyway. All you have to do is post a project and let the freelancers bid on it. You can then review the proposals and take a closer look at the freelancers’ profiles before you make the hiring decision. For premium clients, Truelancer provides “Prime Managers” and “Project Success Partners” features to help you manage communication and ensure a smooth workflow.
Website: Truelancer.com

Fiverr
Known for its gig-based services, Fiverr lists “Electrical Engineering” discipline under the “Programming & Tech” category. The platform doesn’t follow the traditional practice of asking a client to post a project. Instead, it encourages you to use the search function and filter the results based on your project requirements. Freelancers on the platform have their pre-set project scope, but they’re allowed to propose custom jobs in accordance with the clients’ requests. Electronic gigs in Fiverr typically include PCB design, schematic drawing, Arduino modules, hardware documentation, BOM generation, and Gerber production. Sellers used fixed-price gigs from $5 all the way to hundreds of dollars, depending on the services included.
Website: Fiverr.com

Upwork
Quite possibly the most recognizable name in the freelancing world, Upwork offers an extensive range of categories and disciplines populated by more profiles than anybody will ever need. For example, in the “industrial and project design” category alone, you’ll be provided with a huge selection of relevant attributes such as consumer electronics, IoT, machinery, toys, and wearables, along with such sub-disciplines as concept development, 2D drawing, 3D printing, product rendering and visualization, and prototype design engineering services. Each field of expertise listed on Upwork has hundreds of freelancers ready to work on your project. You can post a project and choose a freelancer from the incoming applicants, or directly purchase predefined projects by browsing through the freelancers’ profiles.
Website: Upwork.com
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Takeaway
Not every freelancing platform, generalized or specialized, is built the same. A general talent marketplace might give you access to more freelancers eager to find new projects, but there’s little guarantee that any of those candidates are qualified to handle your electrical engineering projects. Some general freelancing sites have no engineering category at all. On the other hand, specialized platforms and job boards have a tighter focus on specific fields of expertise or industry categories, meaning you’ll have an easier time finding the right freelancers thanks to the relatively narrow specializations. This is why Cad Crowd sits at the top of the list when it comes to electrical engineering designs and CAD documentation projects.
Its unique approach to the tech talent marketplace, with its private projects, crowdsourcing, and long-term collaboration options, is at the moment the best option to inject additional expertise into your project. Get the free quote today.